Seal for a joint or juncture – Seal between fixed parts or static contact against... – Contact seal for a pipe – conduit – or cable
Reexamination Certificate
2000-09-07
2002-10-01
Knight, Anthony (Department: 3626)
Seal for a joint or juncture
Seal between fixed parts or static contact against...
Contact seal for a pipe, conduit, or cable
C277S616000, C277S627000, C277S639000, C277S651000, C277S593000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06457726
ABSTRACT:
The present invention relates to a sealing arrangement for a flat flanged joint comprising a preferably metallic base body having bearing surfaces on each of its two sides for ring-shaped supports made of a soft material, the bearing surfaces being flat over a large area and being situated essentially directly opposite to each other, at least one ring tooth being provided in the inner radial area of each bearing surface and preferably at least one ring tooth being also provided in the outer radial area of each bearing surface, said soft material supports each being fixed on the bearing surfaces, the ring teeth, when the arrangement is assembled, coming to rest on the flange surfaces, and the soft material supports being at least inwardly limited by the ring teeth. A generic sealing arrangement can be seen from DE 295 04 402 U1. The two bearing surfaces are flat over a large area and are situated opposite to each other. In the outer radial area of each bearing surface, there is an outer ring tooth, and in the inner radial area, there is an inner ring tooth. Supports made of a soft material, usually graphite, are bonded onto the bearing surfaces. When the arrangement is assembled, the soft material supports are embedded between the ring teeth, the flanges and the bearing surfaces of the base body. As a consequence of this encapsulation, a soft material support cannot crawl beyond the ring teeth. In the known sealing arrangement, the ring teeth are prepared by turning on a lathe or by stamping, i.e., each tooth is solid and consists of the same material as the base body. This kind of preparation by turning on a lathe or stamping is very material-intensive and labor-intensive and therefore relatively expensive. In addition, from a certain diameter, the die-cut blank can no longer be stamped into an encapsulated seal so that too solid outer and inner teeth are formed. In this case, the die is not capable of exerting the necessary force so that the blank is deformed in such a way that too solid outer and inner teeth are formed.
EP-A-268 134 describes a cylinder head gasket in which the metal sheet is bent open to a U shape, and in addition, adjacent wave-shape impressions are preferably present. Another unclaimed embodiment shows a metallic base body with an enlargement formed by upsetting. This is intended to achieve that the graphite layers covering the crests of the waves are compressed to a particularly high extent at these waves, and in addition, a purely metallic seal towards the combustion chamber is produced. This type of cylinder head gasket has not proven useful in practice because already the preparation of these metallic base bodies is extraordinarily difficult and expensive. Further, a compression of the graphite layers occurs only in the range of the wave-shaped impression towards the inside. This cylinder head gasket is a friction-type shunt seal, i.e., a seal in which almost the whole force leads to a contact of metal on metal. In these contact sites, the soft material support is destroyed. In contrast, in the inner zone of the gasket, the soft material support is not sufficiently compacted.
Further, the so-called wave-ring seal is known which also has a metallic base body with soft material supports on both sides. In this arrangement, the base body is wave-shaped throughout its width. Thus, the bearing surfaces of the base body for the soft material supports are also wave-shaped. When the arrangement is assembled, the base body does not contact the. flange so that encapsulation of the soft material supports. does not occur. In another commercially available seal arrangement, the base body also comprises bearing surfaces for ring-shaped supports made of a soft material on both of its sides. This base body has a meandering configuration throughout its width so that proper ring teeth are not present. The base body comes to rest on the flanges on several relatively broad areas, and between them, there are the soft material supports which are thus also compartmentalized. However, they are not positioned opposite to each other, but radially juxtaposed. Therefore, these seal arrangements are relatively broad and often exhibit crevice corrosion due to the broad metallic stamping surfaces which come into contact with the flange. This then results in gradual leakage of the flanged joint. In addition, all these seals have the great disadvantage that they have virtually no spring properties.
In the prior art, there are further so-called metal-reinforced seals consisting of a metallic base body and supports made of a soft material, such as graphite, provided on both sides thereof. Such metal-graphite seals belong to the so-called spiked-sheet, burr-sheet seals having a, mostly pin-bearing, steel ring with a graphite support or a similar soft material provided on both sides thereof, which is yet to be compacted, however. Depending on the application, such soft material supports can already have a precompaction which is independent of the designated pressure range, however. When mounted in the arrangement, the soft material supports are further compacted by the screw force applied, up to the maximum possible compaction. Thus, the higher the soft material supports are compacted, the better is the leakage rate. In these spiked-sheet, burr-sheet or aramide fiber seals, for example, according to DIN 2690 for DIN flanges or also for ANSI flanges, the area to be sealed ranges from the flange shoulder to just before the screw holes of the centering screw.
Since the flange sealing beads are very broad in DIN and ANSI flanges, the screw force exerted is distributed onto the very broad sealing bead of the flanges and thus onto the whole sealing width of the seal. However, the smaller the sealing area of the seal, the higher is the surface pressure for equal screw forces. Therefore, seal manufacturers seek to reduce the sealing width or sealing area of the seal.
With so-called grooved seals or spiral seals, this is possible without difficulty. With spiked-sheet, burr-sheet or other soft material seals, this is not possible because they are die-cut from seal plates. In order to reduce the sealing area in these die-cut seals as well, some manufacturers have begun to precompact the graphite of a die-cut seal, e.g., according to DIN 2690, from the outer edge of the seal to the average diameter of the seal. Such precompaction is effected by exerting a force, for example, by means of a large press. While such seals are precompacted from the outer edge to the center, they also exhibit the drawback that the seal, when mounted, is aftercompacted by the exertion of the screw force from the inner edge of the seal to the already precompacted center. Thus, ultimately, the graphite is again more or less uniformly compacted throughout the area. One great disadvantage of this approach is that the screw force exerted is not applied to a narrow sealing region, as desired, but to the whole sealing area of the seal. Thus, after mounting or in the mounted state, the density of the soft material support is again almost equal throughout the area.
It has been the object of the present invention to provide a sealing arrangement for a flat flanged joint which, while having an at least equal leakage rate performance, exhaust-proof property and component safety as with the seals of the prior art, can be prepared with lower cost. At the same time, if possible, the insertion height shall be reduced, and the sealing width be relatively low. These objects are achieved by the sealing arrangement according to claim
1
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Further, preferably, the seal shall have such a design that the soft material supports, in the mounted state, have a higher density on both sides from the inner diameter up to a certain outer zone. Then, while the thickness is equal, such a seal has a higher compaction on the inside, towards the medium, and a substantially lower compaction towards the outside, i.e., towards the atmosphere. By having a higher compaction on the inside, a substantially higher surface pressure is achieved in the inner zone. In c
Jacobson & Holman PLLC
Knight Anthony
Peavey Enoch
LandOfFree
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